Wednesday, December 28, 2011

Since the North Carolina Challenge, I have been using a Greenland paddle in my workouts. Some fast EC and NCC paddlers have used them, so I have been looking at videos and trying to acquire the art. I have used Werner carbon bent shafts for cruising and whitewater paddling, and I have been using an Epic wing for workouts for the past year. I have fooled around on the lake with the Greenland paddle at the camp where I teach in the summer, so I am comfortable with rolling with it.

A couple of days ago I went out on Time Ford Lake toward the end of a frontal passage. It was 37 degrees and the wind was blowing at 15-20 with gusts to the high 20s. The lake was streaky with whitecaps and 1-2 foot waves. Occasionally rain squally came through.

I was buttoned up in mid-weight capalene topped by a fleece and a NRS sea kayaking rain jacket. I had neoprene pogies on my hands.

I paddled out against the wind. I didn’t deploy the GPS, but I figure I was going about 2 mph against the wind and waves, with an occasional gust stopping me. Coming back I surfed the waves and flew along, having to paddle hard to get any purchase on the water.

The wind never yanked at the paddle as it would the wing or the Werner touring blade. I was always comfortable with the bite and angle of the blade.

Conclusion: I am going to at least take along a Greenland blade on WaterTribe challenges.

Friday, December 9, 2011

Up until Thanksgiving it seemed as though there would not be
time for my annual early December Everglades trip. This is an ideal time to visit the ‘Glades
since but bugs are light and, except for foreign visitors, there are few people
in the back country, but activities from famiy to utility board to fire
department seemed to be too demanding.
Then Ann mentioned that she used these times to make peanut brittle
Christmas gifts and that my planned two-day trip to the Mississippi Gulf
Islands National Seashore would not be long enough. So, at the last minute, I decided to go.

It is a two day drive from Sewanee to Flamingo, and my plan
was to explore some alternate routes through Florida Bay, including
Murray-Clive and Crocodile Dragover. At
the end of the first day’s drive, I took advantage of the hospitality of Bill
and Shelia Fite on Davis Island in Tampa.
Bill is a fellow WaterTribe member as well as a canoe camping friend
(See Santa Fe and St. Marys trips)and banjo enthusiast. Bill has sailed all over the shallow west
coast of Florida, and his insights about routes are invaluable.

The second day’s drive took me to Flamingo. With my Senior Pass ($10 for a lifetime
National Parks Pass), I had only to pay the $1.50 fee for a canoe or kayak and
the camping fee. A real bargain. I settled into the Flamingo campground and
explored about at sunset for birds and critters. Red Shouldered Hawks hunted around the
campground during the day, and their place was taken by Barred Owls at night. I also encountered Great Egrets, Great White
Herons, Roseate Spoonbills, Storks Alligators and dozens of Coots. By the time I got back, the fierce winds of
the day (20-25 kts and gusty) had calmed and the swamp angels (mosquitoes) had
taken flight. I swiftly cooked supper
and ducked inside my tent to eat, but not before an alert Crow attempted to fly
away with part of the meal.

I fell asleep under the stars and an almost-full moon (I
left the fly off the tent) while the owls hooted and the herons squawked. Except for the noise from a high school group
at the other end of the campground, it was an almost-perfect evening.

Dawn found me fixing coffee and oatmeal, swatting
mosquitoes, and listening to the weather forecast: 20-25 kt. Winds, gusting to
35, with a Small Craft Warning. It did
not sound like a good day to start a three day tip on Florida Bay in my Kruger Sea
Wind canoe with a Balogh sailing rig.
The ranger concurred with my decision, and a look out onto the Bay from
the ranger station further confirmed that discretion was the better part of
valor.

Some friends had portaged from Hells Bay to West Lake a week
or so earlier and paddled down West Lake and several smaller lakes into Florida
Bay near Snake Bight, and Bill had recommended West Lake for a day trip, so I
took the canoe off the car and launched onto the little bay at the West Lake
parking lot. The wind was howling in the
trees, but the protected bay looked easy to handle. I didn’t even take the cover for the sea
canoe’s cockpit.

SURPRISE! As I paddled
out into the open lake, I found 1-2 foot breaking waves. The water was cloudy and streaky since the
long axis of the lake was oriented to the wind.
I had to approach the waves at an angle (called “quartering”) to keep
them from breaking into the canoe, so I paddled for an hour down the lake to
the opposite shore. The waves and wind
were increasing, and I wished that I had remembered the cover (Hubris
kills!). I decided to turn around and
carefully surf back; again quartering the waves to avoid burying the bow or
broaching. I was happy to be back on
solid ground.

Emerging from the launch cove onto West Lake

But the winds brought an advantage: the mosquitoes can’t fly
in this stuff (the rangers said that this was a bad year for them.), so I
decided to take some of the short hikes the Park offered. Here are some pictures from those walks:

Ole gator sleeping on a log

Another gator in the clear water

Anhinga drying its wings

Egret preening

Purple Galinule

Tricolored Heron

Stork

Stork Landing

Black Vulture

Stork in Flight

Just before dark, I returned to the campsite, took a hot
shower (they now have solar-heated hot water!), and fixed supper. Just as I went into the tent to eat, someone
called, “Is there anyone here?” It was
Park volunteer backcountry ranger John Buckley, a fellow Kruger paddler and
WaterTribe lurker. He lives on a
houseboat in the back country and was just in for resupply. He came over when he saw my Sea Wind on the
car.

After our talk, I put on the tent fly since it was clouding
up and read for about an hour before falling asleep. The tent, a REI Halfdome, had been a mainstay
of my camping for about five years. It
probably has about 200 nights on it.
Only the Hennessey Hamock gets out more.
It had been stored in the hot attic and the waterproofing felt sticky
when I unpacked it. I mention all of
this because a rain squall came and hovered over Flamingo for about two hours
during the night, and all my stuff was soaked.
I guess I need to move my tents and flys out of that hot attic!

The next day, the forecast had the winds dropping to 15-20
kts and only a Small Craft Advisory posted.
Winds were out of the East, so I thought it would be a good day to reach
(sail at approximately right angles to the wind) down through Murray-Clive and
past Man O War Key. Only the return from
Murray to Flamingo would be upwind. I
rigged the boat with cover and outriggers and double-reefed the sail. I had GPS, SPOT and EPIRB all on board for
safety. I had food and lights in case I
was late in returning and foul weather gear in case the rains returned. I had sunscreen and lip balm and
broad-brimmed hat for sun protection. I
had a bilge pump and a sponge to get out excess water and four liters of
drinking water. I was prepared!

Then I sailed out of the harbor with the Flamingo bulkhead
lined with observers. As I passed in
front of them, I realized that I didn’t have my life jacket! I had to turn back and go back to the truck
to get it. Brain Fart!

Here is the video from the trip out:

Several items are worthy of note:

Bearing WSW from the last Flamingo channel
marker, you see a large key and then two smaller ones to the right of it. Murray is the right end of the larger key.

After you go through the first pair of posts
(one on the left and one on the right) coming toward Flamingo, you have to turn
left, back toward the big key. Then
almost all of the posts are on your right.

Past Murray, the channel is almost dead straight
until the little left and right around the end of Clive.

After Clive, you come into the deeper Man O War
basin, which is relatively deep and clear, even when the wind is making the
rest of the water cloudy.

Clive is covered with birds, and the rangers say
this is a beautiful place during a full moon.
A good reason to make the long climb up onto the Johnson Key Chickee.

Coming back, the winds had increased and the tide was running fast. Though the tide was in my favor, the wind was all of 20 in my face, and the waves were short, steep 3-4 feet, occasionally breaking. Again, I had to quarter them to find the mean between having them break over the bow and broaching.

When I got back to Flamingo, there were phone calls telling
me that a friend had died and that my wife had pneumonia. Rather than stay the two more days that I had
scheduled, I left in the dying light for the 900 mile drive home. Another adventure in the books. I still have to go to Crocodile Dragover.

About Me

Retired middle school and high school science teacher, environmentalist (not retired), and lifetime messer about in boats (canoes, kayaks, sailboats, whitewater, flatwater, long distance and definitely not retired!).
I am a Lead Instructor for Wilderness Medical Associates and I teach whitewater canoeing and kayaking at Camp Merrie Woode in North Carolina.
I am Assistant Fire Chief with Sewanee Fire and Rescue and a volunteer EMT for Sewanee EMS. I spend a lot of time working on the boards of The Land Trust for Tennessee, The Cloud Forest School, and Housing Sewanee.